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- REVIEWS, Page 103SHORT TAKES
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- MUSIC: The Maestro's Mixed Legacy
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- Not since Nietzsche's passionate briefs for and against
- Wagner has anyone so eloquently argued both sides of a
- musician's claim to greatness as ARTURO TOSCANINI does for
- himself in his recorded legacy. RCA's Toscanini Collection --
- 82 CDs, available in 71 volumes -- produces clear evidence that
- he was both an inspired interpreter and an artist who applied
- his gifts inconsistently to a fairly narrow, mainly 19th century
- repertoire. The collection represents most of Toscanini's
- recordings from 1920 to 1954. In a splendid 1946 La Boheme --
- 50 years after the maestro led its world premiere -- the
- microphones capture his unwitting participation in the Act I
- love duet, turning it into an enchanting -- or is it
- off-putting? -- trio.
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- MUSIC: Beyond Roses
-
- There must be some unwritten law of rock 'n' roll
- thermodynamics stating that the more stellar the band, the more
- likely its members will split off and go solo. Consider one of
- the founding members of Guns N' Roses, rhythm guitarist and
- songwriter IZZY STRADLIN. Stradlin departed the world's
- orneriest rock band in 1991, and shows up now with a
- loose-jointed, slaphappy and rather neat debut. Izzy Stradlin
- and the Ju Ju Hounds (Geffen) parades much of the assaultive
- power of GN'R, but leavens it with a more relaxed funk and a
- bracing dose of humor. Time Gone By, one of Stradlin's own
- tunes, shows off an engaging ability to be both tough and
- wistful at once. Hey, Axl: got to be your turn soon.
-
- BOOKS: Postscript to War
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- British novelist Ian McEwan has carved an icy career out
- of the motto that evil lurks in the hearts of men. In all his
- books, notably The Cement Garden and The Innocent, malice,
- frailty and misplaced zealotry lead to consequences that empty
- the soul. His latest novel, BLACK DOGS (Doubleday; $19.50), is
- swift and flinty, telling how a young woman's life, and that of
- her family, were permanently altered by an encounter with two
- starving attack dogs left behind by the Nazis in postwar France.
- If Black Dogs is not up to McEwan's best work, it may be that
- the woman, who has a strong mystical streak, never really comes
- to life. Her estranged husband, a leftist blowhard as only
- Britain can produce them, runs away with the book.
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- CINEMA: Episodic Enchantments
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- Adolpho (Steve Buscemi) is a young, unproduced filmmaker
- so desperate for backing that he's hawking his 500-page script
- in the want ads. Joe (the marvelous Seymour Cassel) is a genial
- small-time mobster eager to broaden his cultural horizons. IN
- THE SOUP mixes this ill-matched pair in a low-budget,
- black-and-white comedy that features singing landlords, a
- hemophiliac hit man and a dope dealer in a gorilla suit. There's
- also a touching scene with a wistful widower (Sully Boyar),
- whose safe the indefatigable Joe tries to crack. Alexandre
- Rockwell's film is perhaps too episodic for its own narrative
- good. But there are guys in Hollywood spending millions and not
- getting results half as hilarious -- and inventive -- as his
- best vignettes.
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- TELEVISION: Human Figurehead
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- Part of our fascination with the British royal family is
- their almost total inaccessibility. For all the tabloid gossip,
- tell-all books and TV-movie re-creations, we know almost nothing
- about what really goes on behind closed palace doors. Thus
- practically every scene in ELIZABETH R, a BBC documentary soon
- to air on PBS, is a revelation. Producer Edward Mirzoeff was
- given unprecedented access to the Queen over a 13-month period
- (which included the Gulf War and an official visit to the U.S.).
- We watch her discussing her daily schedule with aides, making
- small talk with her portraitist, getting excited at the horse
- races, and helping Ronald Reagan get some decaffeinated coffee
- at a state reception. As figureheads go, she seems quite a
- decent sort.
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